In a beautiful, desolate place, the death of a grandfather brings together all the members of a family.
Don Quijote de la Mancha is a novel written by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra.
'The wind spread the news. It stank of tragedy...' The civil war in Spain is over. Rome is in the hands of a single man: Julius Caesar.
A furious old dog, trees with sinister branches, a wolf running away from two monsters and a white puppy lost in the woods.
A crime is about to take place. The only person aware of it is a little girl of two years old and she can't do much about it. Will she be able to avert it? This is the first case for Sergeant Mona Flores, a new arrival in Almería, Spain.
On many afternoons, after fishing for a while “granddad would take me home”. There, the young narrator of this story will understand, much more so than he would in front of the sea, what it means to be a fish wounded by the “cruelty” of the hook.
He's been fascinated by the stars for as long as he can remember. His passion leads him to undertake an incredible journey full of surprises and discoveries, also about himself.
Already an old man, Cayute, the central character of the novel, undertakes an exercise in retrospection, through which we learn the history of Almoneda, an imaginary territory on the frontier between Spain and Portugal.
Alberti was a noisy child whose burping was louder than a bear in the wild. All that roaring, as well he knows, left him singing very low.
In The English Cemetery, Rafael Torres turns to the grand tours made in their day by romance European travellers, most especially English ones.